Neocon Analysts Push for Invasion of Libya
Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
February 25, 2011
CNN reports the Pentagon and NATO are ready to send troops into Libya under the cover of
humanitarian assistance. CNN underscores the situation by stating that reports say Gaddafi will
fight to the end and will seek martyrdom.
Military intervention “is something which I hope doesn‟t happen, but it looks as though at some
point that it should happen,” Simon Henderson, senior fellow at the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy, told CNN.
Catherine Ashton, the High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy of the European Union, says the
globalists are working on a response to the Libya crisis.
The Washington Institute for Near East Policy is a fanatical neocon operation. It supports the
positions of the Likud and other racist warmongers in Israel. It was founded by Martin Indyk, the
former research director of AIPAC.
WINEP is also involved with the Council on Foreign Relations in policymaking on the bogus
war on manufactured terrorism and the intelligence created network of radical Islamists.
“What‟s an acceptable number of civilian deaths? I don‟t know. Choose your figure,” Henderson
said. “At the very least, instead of having a casualty list certainly in the hundreds, possibly in the
thousands, we don‟t want a casualty list numbering in the tens of thousands, or 100,000 or so.”
WINEP was intimately involved with Douglas Feith‟s Office of Special Plans making the case –
including cooking up bogus intelligence and scary WMD stories – for the illegal invasion of Iraq
that ultimately resulted in the murder of over a million Iraqis, so any crocodile tears over the
lives of Arabs
Bush era diplomat Nicholas Burns, who sits on the board of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and is
more or less a permanent fixture at the Pentagon psyop CNN these days, says Moammar will
probably go out in destructive fashion. “You‟ve got to assume the worst about Moammar
Gaddafi,” he said. “With his back to the wall, he‟s going to go out in a blaze of vicious attacks.”
Other prominent neocons seem to be a bit more reticent. Propagandist Robert Kagan, who served
as an advisor for the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq – or rather the committee for the
invasion and destruction of Iraq – told CNN the global elite are not “talking about immediate military actions now.” In other words, attacking Libya is a distinct possibility. It may just take
some time to get things rolling.
Kagan is a founding member of Project for the New American Century – the organization most
responsible for creating the ideological underpinnings of the Iraq invasion – and is also a
globalist stooge at the Council on Foreign Relations. He worked in the State Department.
Ibrahim Sharqieh, deputy director of Brookings Doha Center in Qatar, interpreted Kagan‟s
statement as indicating that military force remains a possibility. “In my opinion, it‟s still
premature to talk about U.S. military intervention in Libya at this point, but we should not
eliminate it completely,” Sharqieh said.
The Brookings Institute takes money from the Ford Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, the
United Nations, JP Morgan Chase, Shell Oil, the World Economic Forum, and no shortage of
other transnational banks and corporations. It is a premier globalist operation.
Meanwhile, Obama and Secretary of State Clinton are busy building the required attack
consensus:
“On Thursday, President Barack Obama spoke with the leaders of France, Italy and the United
Kingdom on coordinating an international response to the crisis in Libya, the White House said,”
CNN reports. “In separate phone conversations with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Italian
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and British Prime Minister David Cameron, Obama „expressed
his deep concern with the Libyan government‟s use of violence, which violates international
norms and every standard of human decency, and discussed appropriate and effective ways for
the international community to immediately respond,‟ the White House statement said… The
leaders discussed the range of options that both the United States and European countries are
preparing to hold the Libyan government accountable for its actions, as well as planning for
humanitarian assistance.”
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